Adoption of circular economy for a sustainable solid waste management system in Malaysia

Purpose - Solid waste management is inextricably linked to population, urbanization and economic development (Manaf, Samah & Zukki, 2009). Urbanization improves the economic wealth and disposable income which leads to the increase in the consumption of goods and services and correspondingly incr...

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Main Author: Zainal, Mhd Saiful Anuar
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2017
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Online Access:http://repo.uum.edu.my/24618/1/SICONSEM%202017%20203%20204.pdf
http://repo.uum.edu.my/24618/
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id my.uum.repo.24618
record_format eprints
institution Universiti Utara Malaysia
building UUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Utara Malaysia
content_source UUM Institutionali Repository
url_provider http://repo.uum.edu.my/
language English
topic HC Economic History and Conditions
spellingShingle HC Economic History and Conditions
Zainal, Mhd Saiful Anuar
Adoption of circular economy for a sustainable solid waste management system in Malaysia
description Purpose - Solid waste management is inextricably linked to population, urbanization and economic development (Manaf, Samah & Zukki, 2009). Urbanization improves the economic wealth and disposable income which leads to the increase in the consumption of goods and services and correspondingly increase the amount of solid waste being generated.According to Periathamby, Hamid and Khidzir (2009), the generation of solid waste in Malaysia has increased for more than 91% over the past 10 years at an annual growth rate of 5.2% with only 21% being recycled and the remaining waste end up at disposal sites. At a cost of RM2.9 billion spent in 2016 with the exponential increase in cost at an average rate of 26% per annum, this phenomenon indicates that the current practice is not sustainable (PEMANDU, 2015). Therefore, this study proposes to adopt the concept of a Circular Economy which is based on a closed loop system that promotes the application of 3Rs (Reduce, Re-use and Recycle) principle to minimize the waste at source and maximizing the resource yields by circulating the materials in use as efficiently as possible.The concept brings new growth and job opportunities and it has developed from the recognition that a Linear Economy is unsustainable (ISWA, 2015). Hence, this paper gives an insight into possibility of embracing the concept of Circular Economy and further establishes a proposed framework and enablers to suit Malaysian’s needs towards developing a cost-effective and sustainable solid waste management in the country.The scope of the study will cover the municipal solid waste and other similar waste from industrial, commercial and institutional.Methodology - This study will be based on the quantitative research. A baseline data will include solid waste compositions, characteristics and the current recycling practices.The data sampling will be collected and divided according to (1) geographical distribution; (2) regional distribution; (3) size variation; (4) socio-economic; (5) sectorial diversity; and (6) rural and urban areas.The analysis on the waste will be carried out using the sampling technique as per draft Malaysian Standard 10Z011R0 (2011). All other data will be collected from the scientific literatures, existing data bases, observations on the phenomenon, and structured interviews with relevant policy makers, and set of questionnaires applied to stakeholders. Descriptive and inferential statistic methods were used to draw conclusions.The outcomes of the study are a comprehensive list of information on key enablers, initiatives and indicators that are relevant to the Circular Economy.Findings - This study will prove that waste is a valuable resource and the government should reap the potential economic benefit from the valuable materials in waste estimated at RM1.63 billion per year derived from the 22% of recyclables items.This amount would alleviate the government financial burden (56%) and make the solid waste management is self-sufficient in the long run.The successful implementation of the Circular Economy will harmonize the environment, economy and society, and aspire to divert 40% of waste from landfill and to achieve 22% recycling rate by 2020 (PEMANDU, 2015). Findings from the study endeavor to provide guidelines for Malaysia to realize a successful transformation towards a Circular Economy that will maximize the economic return from waste, reduce the cost, protect the environment and improve the quality of life for the people.This will pave the way for a more realistic roadmap towards sustainability.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Zainal, Mhd Saiful Anuar
author_facet Zainal, Mhd Saiful Anuar
author_sort Zainal, Mhd Saiful Anuar
title Adoption of circular economy for a sustainable solid waste management system in Malaysia
title_short Adoption of circular economy for a sustainable solid waste management system in Malaysia
title_full Adoption of circular economy for a sustainable solid waste management system in Malaysia
title_fullStr Adoption of circular economy for a sustainable solid waste management system in Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Adoption of circular economy for a sustainable solid waste management system in Malaysia
title_sort adoption of circular economy for a sustainable solid waste management system in malaysia
publishDate 2017
url http://repo.uum.edu.my/24618/1/SICONSEM%202017%20203%20204.pdf
http://repo.uum.edu.my/24618/
_version_ 1644284096305692672
spelling my.uum.repo.246182018-08-09T04:43:04Z http://repo.uum.edu.my/24618/ Adoption of circular economy for a sustainable solid waste management system in Malaysia Zainal, Mhd Saiful Anuar HC Economic History and Conditions Purpose - Solid waste management is inextricably linked to population, urbanization and economic development (Manaf, Samah & Zukki, 2009). Urbanization improves the economic wealth and disposable income which leads to the increase in the consumption of goods and services and correspondingly increase the amount of solid waste being generated.According to Periathamby, Hamid and Khidzir (2009), the generation of solid waste in Malaysia has increased for more than 91% over the past 10 years at an annual growth rate of 5.2% with only 21% being recycled and the remaining waste end up at disposal sites. At a cost of RM2.9 billion spent in 2016 with the exponential increase in cost at an average rate of 26% per annum, this phenomenon indicates that the current practice is not sustainable (PEMANDU, 2015). Therefore, this study proposes to adopt the concept of a Circular Economy which is based on a closed loop system that promotes the application of 3Rs (Reduce, Re-use and Recycle) principle to minimize the waste at source and maximizing the resource yields by circulating the materials in use as efficiently as possible.The concept brings new growth and job opportunities and it has developed from the recognition that a Linear Economy is unsustainable (ISWA, 2015). Hence, this paper gives an insight into possibility of embracing the concept of Circular Economy and further establishes a proposed framework and enablers to suit Malaysian’s needs towards developing a cost-effective and sustainable solid waste management in the country.The scope of the study will cover the municipal solid waste and other similar waste from industrial, commercial and institutional.Methodology - This study will be based on the quantitative research. A baseline data will include solid waste compositions, characteristics and the current recycling practices.The data sampling will be collected and divided according to (1) geographical distribution; (2) regional distribution; (3) size variation; (4) socio-economic; (5) sectorial diversity; and (6) rural and urban areas.The analysis on the waste will be carried out using the sampling technique as per draft Malaysian Standard 10Z011R0 (2011). All other data will be collected from the scientific literatures, existing data bases, observations on the phenomenon, and structured interviews with relevant policy makers, and set of questionnaires applied to stakeholders. Descriptive and inferential statistic methods were used to draw conclusions.The outcomes of the study are a comprehensive list of information on key enablers, initiatives and indicators that are relevant to the Circular Economy.Findings - This study will prove that waste is a valuable resource and the government should reap the potential economic benefit from the valuable materials in waste estimated at RM1.63 billion per year derived from the 22% of recyclables items.This amount would alleviate the government financial burden (56%) and make the solid waste management is self-sufficient in the long run.The successful implementation of the Circular Economy will harmonize the environment, economy and society, and aspire to divert 40% of waste from landfill and to achieve 22% recycling rate by 2020 (PEMANDU, 2015). Findings from the study endeavor to provide guidelines for Malaysia to realize a successful transformation towards a Circular Economy that will maximize the economic return from waste, reduce the cost, protect the environment and improve the quality of life for the people.This will pave the way for a more realistic roadmap towards sustainability. 2017-12-04 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://repo.uum.edu.my/24618/1/SICONSEM%202017%20203%20204.pdf Zainal, Mhd Saiful Anuar (2017) Adoption of circular economy for a sustainable solid waste management system in Malaysia. In: Sintok International Conference on Social Science and Management (SICONSEM 2017), 4-5 December 2017, Adya Hotel, Langkawi Island, Kedah, Malaysia...
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